Hi liana I’m not sure this is a straightforward question. Can you refine what you mean by types please? I say that because we could think of it in terms of species or variant morphs of a given species. You know like saying how many types of dogs are there as opposed to how many species of dogs? I keep members of the genus Salamandra and I know there are issues there re classification with some subspecies in doubt depending on who you’re talking to. Have you started your research with a Google search? How will you record your data so that you’re not simply given a number of types and enables you to double check names? You’ll need to use their scientific names too to avoid colloqualism (is that how you spell it?). Good luck liana I look forward to this one.
Families - nine; additional subfamilies, about six.
Species and subspecies, named, unnamed, or suspected - more than 800. Potentially many more hiding in places where no-one has yet looked [like much of northern Asia for lungless salamanders].
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Not necessarily but if you’re wanting to continue to grow your breeding capacity then yes. Breeding axolotls isn’t a cheap hobby nor is it a get rich quick scheme. It costs a lot of money and time and deditcation
Would Chinese fire belly newts be more or less inclined towards an aquatic eft set up versus Japanese . I'm raising them and have abandoned the terrarium at about 5 months old and switched to the aquatic setups you describe. I'm wondering if I could do this as soon as they morph?
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